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I want to connect 2 TVs to one of my Joeys.
No problem with having both TVs viewing the same program.
First TV I can connect to joey with HDMI cable
Second TV has coax connection that I can access from Joey Location.
I can't rewire because the insulation is sprayed foam.
The only option I can think of wireless and I don't know if or what is available that would work.
I would appreciate any suggestions/solutions on how to do this.
Thanks
Bob

I want to connect 2 TVs to one of my Joeys.No problem with having both TVs viewing the same program.First TV I can connect to joey with HDMI cableSecond TV has coax connection that I can access from Joey Location.I can't rewire because the insulation is sprayed foam.The only option I can think of wireless and I don't know if or what is available that would work.I would appreciate any suggestions/solutions on how to do this.ThanksBob

Use an RF modulator to convert the RCA connections on the joey to coax, then connect that to the line to the second tv.

The postings on this site are my own and don't represent Dish's positions, strategies, or opinions.

I was doing additional research and it seems the only downside is that the picture quality will not be as good. I did a search on RF modulators and they start at around $10 for an RCA brand and go up from there. Does higher costs relate to higher quality/performance or do they all use a standard chip set?
Thanks

Most TVs are still capable of tuning analog channels so an RF modulator would work.

The question you have to ask yourself is whether an SD signal is good enough.

Questions like this are usually easier to answer if you tell use exactly what you have TV-wise and what you want to end up with. We can usually get you where you're going faster if you're not trying to figure it out yourself as a thread.

Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought. -- JFK

I've had an RF modulation system since I first installed (DISH had no clue what to do with my house, so I had to do the whole install) in '94, DISH could only do one TV, one box, I needed 9 (now 13) TV's covered. So thus the modulators (ChannelPlus 3445 & 5445) and my early conviction to DISH because of their UHF remotes. All the gear is in the basement each on a separate channel. Matter of fact I have 8 additional channels that carry 5 DVR tuners, a DVD/VCR, security cameras and a feed from our media room. I have two cable systems, one RG11 (main trunks) & RG6 (individual feeds) for the TV signal and the old RG59 with DISH box antennas scattered throughout the grounds for the remotes. And everything works and looks great.

I've had an RF modulation system since I first installed (DISH had no clue what to do with my house, so I had to do the whole install) in '94, DISH could only do one TV, one box, I needed 9 (now 13) TV's covered. So thus the modulators (ChannelPlus 3445 & 5445) and my early conviction to DISH because of their UHF remotes. All the gear is in the basement each on a separate channel. Matter of fact I have 8 additional channels that carry 5 DVR tuners, a DVD/VCR, security cameras and a feed from our media room. I have two cable systems, one RG11 (main trunks) & RG6 (individual feeds) for the TV signal and the old RG59 with DISH box antennas scattered throughout the grounds for the remotes. And everything works and looks great.

Would be interesting to see your sketch (MS Visio is good for that) how it's done, where located, etc. One good picture will tell us more.

I have two cable systems, one RG11 (main trunks) & RG6 (individual feeds) for the TV signal and the old RG59 with DISH box antennas scattered throughout the grounds for the remotes. And everything works and looks great.

And everyone was happy until the demise of SD TVs and the realization that HD is pretty cool.

NTSC RF modulation is not a good technology to step into in the 21st century.

Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought. -- JFK

. . . NTSC RF modulation is not a good technology to step into in the 21st century.

Agreed. But it's amazing how well it works and how tight they have the newer tech tied up. I'm not seeing any HD modulators out there like these were. Not even for commercial applications, like Hotels, Hospitals. Only extension devices that only just recently were able to "bypass" or incorporate HDCP. Even the distribution nodes at BestBuy, Target, Walmart are close quartered, nothing special (not HDMI), but very expensive. One BestBuy I saw they were using component distribution.

There are things that we're not being told or allowed to touch to push us to new toys or restricted installers. I wish I was able to complete my frequency doubling conversation. That would have shed light on what I am seeing on my system. And probably why the manufacturer of the modulators didn't reply. Cuz they'll double up. Also I checked and they don't have any new gear for this and still sell what I have. So . . .

Would be interesting to see your sketch (MS Visio is good for that) how it's done, where located, etc. One good picture will tell us more.

I have this old illustration that I did when I first got a 722. Things have changed a bit with additions and updates. But this is the basic install. I just sold my killer equipment rack so things are on open shelving for now. Not real pretty. The Remote Antenna runs are not in the illustration, but a wall plate is shown below.

Now all I need to do is figure out how I am going to "insert" Hoppers and Joeys in this. And wondering what the out come will be. This was a complete experiment and it fared pretty well.

I have 2 of the Actiontec Wireless HDMI setups that I bought on ebay for about $75 each. They work fine from room to room so long as the distance is not too great. It gets kind of spotty if you try to go from one side of my house all the way to the other side (about 60 to 70 feet I would guess), but it works great from room to room at shorter distances or from the first floor to the second floor.

+1 on the Actiontec. Worked great for me as well. It has HDMI passthru, but it sometimes goes out to lunch. Simply running component to my main tv and HDMI to the actiontec solves the problem.

That being said, it sounds like your 2nd TV is just an old SD analog set. So all you need is the RF modulator. PQ will take a minor hit, but you won't really be able to tell since SD is so bad to begin with.